Incorporating famous documents and crucial letters, Abraham Lincoln, Slavery, and the Civil War walks you through the development where Lincoln stood on all the critical issues of the day, including free labor, antebellum politics and the Republican party, slavery, secession, the Civil War, and emancipation.
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.
Michael P. Johnson (Ph.D., Stanford University) is a professor of history at the Johns Hopkins University. He has written or edited six books, including No Chariot Let Down: Charleston’s Free People of Color on the Eve of the Civil War (1984) and The American Promise.
One of the more unique document readers I've encountered because it features both the big speeches and statements of Lincoln's life but also a lot of day-to-day correspondence that gives you a sense of his personality, the course of the war, political machinations, etc. It was actually the later I kind of breezed through; reading orders to field commanders just doesn't add that much to one's grasp of the war as a whole. Still, this reader gives you a great feel for and grounding in Lincoln's thought and politics. As brilliant as he was as an interpreter of American values and purpose, this volume really shows his political acumen, especially on slavery. He played skillfully to his audience, always making a strict distinction between his private desires to see slavery eradicated and his public stance that every step against slavery he took was a war measure in keeping with the powers of the Commander in Chief. And yet, he used that seemingly narrow basis to launch a multi-front assault on slavery both in the border states and in the south. Anyone who criticizes LIncoln for not moving fast enough on slavery needed to appreciate the politics of it, especially northerner's belief that the purpose of the war was to reunify the country and the border states' crucial role in the conflict. Moving too fast (a la Fremont and Hunter) risked losing the whole game. That's why I've always admired Lincoln so much; aside from his personal decency, he didn't let his own sense of what was right get in the way of an intelligent, strategic pursuit of the right.
So this is a good book for people with a high tolerance for detail and old-timey primary sources. It definitely should not be a first-time Civil War book, although Johnson does a great job guiding you through the sources. Cutting some of the fairly bland correspondence could have shortened the whole thing (330 pages, a bit long for a document reader), but overall this is an admirable collection.
President Abraham Lincoln's writings and speechs in a selection! Lincoln wrote a lot of notes, articles, letters, speechs in his political life, Lincoln's Presidency bases on his intellectual actions, on his writings, Lincoln was a Lawyer, his writings express his law philosophy, his law understanding. Lincoln was against slavery! Lincoln was against racism! Lincoln was against colonial destruction of America! Lincoln defenses democracy! Lincoln defenses freedom! Lincoln defenses independency of America! Lincoln was a Senator. Lincoln was a Leader of American citizens! Lincoln's writings express his intellectual power to change the world, Lincoln's writings express his politics to form the free society in America!
I’m not going to lie, I didn’t make it through this. After 100 pages I just couldn’t read anymore of the racist and conciliatory and compromising rhetoric. I’m not American and I don’t subscribe to the cult of Lincoln so that probably worked against me. The Gettysburg sparked a bit of hope in me that it might get better but the battle was already lost. I can’t imagine that I’ll open this up again, but who knows?
Upon first look Lincoln appears to be a complete racist. A deeper look at the documents contained in this book shows that he had slightly different messages for different groups of people. A true politician Lincoln knew he didn't have to say the same things to every audience, there was no 24 hours news cycle, no twitter, no way to make sure his story was always the same, and it wasn't.
Some people might hate me for saying this, but honestly this was so dry and boring. I had such a hard time getting through this book. And I know I'm not the only one. Many of my friends and peers felt the same way. I'm sorry to say that this book was very disappointing.
This is an excellent book to own. If you want to know what Lincoln thought, and his views on Black Americans....don't go to the movies...read his words!
Well edited and a great selection of pertinent writings. Solid overview of Lincoln's views on slavery and the war, and arranged in a readable format. Also a great reference book.